Mailgun
Developer-leaning email infra, owned by Sinch.
Mailgun has long positioned itself as the developer-friendly alternative to SendGrid. The API is well-documented, SMTP is first-class, and routing rules are powerful. Pricing changed in late 2025: pay-as-you-go rates roughly doubled. Still a strong pick for technical teams that want SMTP relay plus rich routing.
Generally good, with deliverability monitoring tools available on higher tiers. Inbound routes and suppressions are battle-tested.
Technical teams that want SMTP relay plus advanced routing.
Teams that need a generous free tier or simple billing.
- › Strong SMTP relay support, useful when migrating off self-hosted Postfix
- › Inbound routes with regex matching
- › Validation and parsing tools available
- › Sub-accounts for agency use cases
- › Pricing changes in late 2025 hurt trust with long-time customers
- › Documentation is comprehensive but occasionally out of date
- › No idempotency keys
- › Sinch ownership has moved focus toward enterprise
Features at a glance
| API | Yes |
| SMTP | Yes |
| SDKs | node, python, go, ruby, php, java |
| Webhooks | Yes |
| Templates | rich |
| React Email | No |
| Batch send | Yes |
| Scheduled send | Yes |
| Suppressions | Yes |
| Multi-tenant | Yes |
| Inbound parsing | Yes |
| Event stream | Yes |
| Idempotency keys | No |
| Dedicated IP | Yes |
Appears in rankings
Best transactional email APIs
Strong SMTP relay, routing rules, and event stream. Late-2025 pricing change is a caveat.
Best developer experience
Mature SDKs and good docs.
Cheapest at scale (1M+/mo)
Volume tiers competitive at scale; pay-as-you-go less so after Dec 2025.
Best deliverability
Good, with reputation tooling on higher tiers.
Best inbound email and parsing services
Routes with regex matching for advanced workflows.
Best for high-volume senders
Volume tiers competitive at scale; routing rules are useful for sharding.
Best AWS SES alternatives
Volume tiers competitive at scale and proper webhooks out of the box.
Best SendGrid alternatives
Closest API ergonomics if you used the SMTP plus API combo.